Abu Ayman al-Iraqi

Abu Ayman al-Iraqi (1965-7 November 2014), born Adnan Latif Hamid al-Sweidawi, was the head of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (later the Islamic State)'s military council from 4 June to 7 November 2014, succeeding Abu Abdulrahman al-Bilawi and preceding Abu Suleiman al-Naser.

Biography
Adnan Latif Hamid al-Sweidawi was born in Anbar Province, Kingdom of Iraq, in 1965. He joined the Iraqi Army and served as a Colonel, also serving in the Air Defense Intelligence. In 2003, when Ba'athist Iraq was overthrown at the start of the Iraq War by a coalition led by the United States and United Kingdom, al-Sweidawi became an insurgent commander. He was captured by the US Army in 2007 and interned at Camp Bucca until 2010, when he was released. Taking on the kunya of "Abu Ayman al-Iraqi", he relocated to Syria, where he joined the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria during the Syrian Civil War. He served as a senior commander in Idlib, Aleppo, and the Lattakiah mountains, and later became the leader of the military council of ISIS after Abu Abdulrahman al-Bilawi was killed by the Iraqi Army on 4 June 2014.

Abu Ayman al-Iraqi was summoned to a meeting of top leaders of the Islamic State in Mosul on 7 November 2014, but the United States launched an airstrike on the meeting as a part of Operation Inherent Resolve. Along with 20 other militants, al-Iraqi was killed, and Abu Suleiman al-Naser became the new military chief.